Socioculturally Situated Narratives as Co-Authors of Student Teachers’ Learning from Experience

From Section:
Instruction in Teacher Training
Published:
Oct. 01, 2014

Source:   Teaching Education, Volume 25, Issue 4, 2014, pages 391-409

This article reports on research into the ways in which student teachers’ experiential learning is mediated by socioculturally situated narrative resources.

The research uses Wertsch’s idea of the narrative template as a co-author of individual narratives. This idea is developed to be useful in the particular context of initial teacher education (ITE).

Data were collected through transcripts from post-lesson observation discussions between student teachers, school-based mentors and university-based tutors.
These transcripts are used to analyse the processes by which beginning teachers master the use of narrative templates for making sense of and, therefore learning from, their experiences.

This research is put into the context of debates about the centrality of ‘on the job’ learning to ITE and developing interest in recent decades in models of teacher knowledge and teacher learning.


Updated: Nov. 24, 2019
Keywords:
Experiential learning | Personal narratives | Professional identity | Student teacher attitudes | Student teachers | Transcripts (written records)